| Journal of Computer Science and Technology 2010, 25(1) 1-2 DOI: ISSN: 1000-9000 CN: CN 11-2296/TP | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Preface |
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Preface | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Abstract:
Bioinformatics is considered as one of the fastest growing fields in science today, thanks to the rapidly expanding and advancing capabilities in biological data collection from cellular organisms using high-throughput measurement technologies. These data reflect different aspects of living organisms such as the existence, structure, functionality and functional states of biological molecules and assemblies under designed experimental conditions. The enormous amount of information hidden in these data allows computational scientists to start to elucidate the internal structures and control mechanisms of biological systems at various levels such as cell, tissue, organ, organism and eco-system in a systematic manner, and even possibly to derive the organizational and operating principles of such systems. Scientists have begun to draw comparisons between the relationship of physics and mathematics and that of biology and computational science, and believe that the future of biology could be taught, like physics, ``as a set of basic systems $cs$ duplicated and adapted to a very wide range of cellular and organismal functions, following basic evolutionary principles constrained by the Earth's geological history'' (T. F. Smith, The challenges facing genomic informatics. Current Topics in Computational Molecular Biology, T. Jiang, Y. Xu and M. Q. Zhang (eds.), pp.3-8, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts (2002).). It is clearly exciting to possibly play a role in helping to transform biological science from a pure experimental science to a science like physics. Yet the gap between where we are now and where we want to be is enormously large! It is generally believed that computational scientists can and should play essential roles in bridging this gap by offering new techniques, frameworks and possibly theories for solving a variety of computational challenges arising in modern biology. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Received: Accepted: Online: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| About author(s): Ying Xu is the Regents-Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar Chair and Professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Institute of Bioinformatics, the University of Georgia. He received his Ph.D. degree in theoretical computer science from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1991. He was a visiting assistant worked for Oak Ridge National Laboratory from 1993 to 2003, where he was a senior staff scientist and a group leader. His current research interests include (a) computational and systems biology relevant to human cancer and early detection, (b) microbial genomes and encoded pathways, and (c) plant genomes and plant cell walls. He has published over 200 research articles and four books covering different areas of bioinformatics and systems biology. Ming Li is a Canada research chair in bioinformatics and a University Professor at the University of Waterloo. He is a fellow of Royal Society of Canada, ACM, and IEEE. He is a recipient of E.W.R. Steacie Fellowship Award in 1996, and the 2001 Killam Fellowship. Together with Paul Vitanyi he has pioneered the applications of Kolmogorov complexity and co-authored the book ``An introduction to Kolmogorov complexity and its applications''. His research interests recently include protein structure determination and the Internet search engine. Tao Jiang received the B.S. degree in computer science and techno-logy from the University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, in July 1984 and Ph.D. degree in computer science from University of Minnesota in Nov. 1988. He was a faculty member at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada during Jan. 1989$sim$July 2001 and is now professor of computer science and engineering at University of California -- Riverside (UCR). He is also a member of the UCR Institute for Integrative Genome Biology, a member of the Center for Plant Cell Biology, a principal scientist at Shanghai Center for Bioinformation Technology, and Changjiang Visiting Professor at Tsinghua University. Tao Jiang's recent research interest includes combinatorial algorithms, computational molecular biology, bioinformatics, and computational aspects of information retrieval. He is a fellow of ACM and of AAAS. More information about his work can be found at http://www1.cs.ucr.edu/$^sim$jiang. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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